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Ch. 5: Prices of Precious Stones

Ch. 5: Prices of Precious Stones Page of 237 Ch. 5: Prices of Precious Stones Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
PRECIOUS STONES
55
and fifty to five hundred dollars per carat; one-half and three-fourths carat, of the same quality, from one hundred and fifty to two hundred and fifty dollars; one-fourth and three-eighths carat, from one hundred to one hundred and twenty-five dollars. Good colors, but very flawy, from one-fourth carat to three carats, range from thirty-five to one hundred dollars. Very light colors sell at from fifteen to thirty dollars.
Aquamarines of the light-bluish tint cost from three to seven dollars per carat. Fine golden beryls, when they are to be had, bring from fifteen to twenty-five or thirty dollars.
Round Oriental pearls of good color and skin, from three to ten grains, cost from two dollars and fifty cents to four dollars base; smaller, about ten per cent, less; larger and especially fine gems, down to five grains, five to eight dollars. Fresh-waters are uncertain, though very fine ones command good prices. Baroques range from a few cents to five dollars per grain. Good wing pearls, from five to ten cents per grain.
Fine small olivines, from one-thirty-second carat down, are worth from twenty-five to fifty dollars per carat. Melange averaging about three-eighths carat, about thirty to thirty-five dollars. Good stones of over one carat seldom come into the market, and sell readily for from sixty to seventy-five dollars. The poorer grades of this stone find slow sale at any price in the market.
Fair Australian opals sell at from three to ten dollars per carat; very good at from ten to fifteen dollars. Gem pieces are very scarce, and find ready buyers at as high as fifty to sixty dollars per carat. Fine matrix sells at from one dollar and fifty cents to three dollars per carat.
Fine American turquoise is graded according to color and size, from three to twelve dollars per carat. Large flawless pieces sell as high as twenty dollars per carat.
Zircon and jargoon of good color range from five to ten dollars per carat. Ordinary material of foreign cut sells at
Ch. 5: Prices of Precious Stones Page of 237 Ch. 5: Prices of Precious Stones
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